The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta schools chief ousted in secret vote

Board decides not to renew Carstarphe­n’s contract in closed-door session, declines to provide details.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

In a crucial decision with little public explanatio­n, the Atlanta school board has chosen not to renew Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract.

The board delivered the news Monday after more than three hours in a closed session. When they returned, Chairman Jason Esteves said a majority of the board did not support extending Carstarphe­n’s contract. The announceme­nt ended weeks of speculatio­n and dashed hopes from some high-profile community leaders who had urged the board to retain Carstarphe­n.

Esteves declined to say which and how many board members opposed a contract renewal. Allowing her contract to expire does not require a public vote, officials said.

The lack of transparen­cy angered some parents in the audience, who told the board that the move threatened public trust.

Esteves read from a prepared statement that did not provide specifics about what motivated the move.

“The board acknowledg­es there will be some disagreeme­nt related to this decision, but we believe it is important for the good of the entire system to move forward now,” the statement said.

Carstarphe­n was hired in 2014. Her contract expires June 30, and Esteves said he hopes she will remain at Atlanta Public Schools until then. Carstarphe­n left the board room before the elected officials came back and announced the decision.

She later sent a message to colleagues saying she has “always done what I believed to be right.”

“The disparity in educationa­l outcomes for Atlanta’s children has been intergener­ational and systemic. The solutions are not easy, which is why I so passionate­ly wanted to stay and finish the job I was hired to do,” she wrote.

An APS spokesman referred questions to the board.

Esteves said the board would begin a search for the next superinten­dent immediatel­y.

After the meeting, Esteves said he was among the majority who did not support extending her contract. The district’s five-year strategic plan ends in June, and the district is currently developing a new one.

“Given the deep divisions both amongst board members and in the community, I think it is time to move on,” he said. “We need a ... superinten­dent in place in time to implement that strategic plan and to see it through over the next five years.”

Atlanta is the third big metro Atlanta district to deal with leadership changes in the last year. Fulton County Schools recently hired a new superinten­dent after its previous leader resigned in November. The DeKalb County School District superinten­dent, hired the year after Carstarphe­n, is set to leave his post at the end of this school year.

A somewhat clearer picture of the APS decision emerged after the meeting through Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on interviews with individual board members.

In addition to Esteves, Cynthia Briscoe Brown, Leslie Grant and Michelle Olympiadis said they opposed extending the superinten­dent’s contract. Erika Mitchell, who along with Olympiadis and Grant voted against Carstarphe­n’s last contract renewal, could not be reached for comment.

Eshé Collins, Kandis Wood Jackson and Nancy Meister said they supported Carstarphe­n. “It’s a very sad day for the kids in the City of Atlanta. She’s done nothing but make strides,” Meister said.

Collins said she wanted to retain stable leadership and thought the decision to pick a new superinten­dent should go to the next board. All nine seats on the board are up for election in 2021. The board is currently down to eight members until a special election this fall fills a District 2 vacancy.

Collins described the board as “deeply divided” over the superinten­dent’s future. She said there are issues the district needs to address — such as greater collaborat­ion and closing academic gaps — but said she didn’t think those concerns were reason to switch leaders.

Both Esteves and Briscoe Brown supported Carstarphe­n during the last contract talks in 2018, and their change of heart appears to have been crucial to the final outcome.

Briscoe Brown said she has been thinking about transition issues and a succession plan for more than a year.

“We’ve made great progress over the last five years, but we’ve got lots more work to do to ensure that every child gets what they need to succeed,” she said. “APS is in a different place now than they were in 2014, and I believe that we need a different skill set in our superinten­dent going forward.”

When Carstarphe­n was hired, the school district was recovering from a districtwi­de cheating scandal. The district was in crisis, and in the five years since leaders tackled a lot of problems.

But the work that remains will be “much more tedious” and in some ways more difficult to show quick results, Briscoe Brown said.

“She has been a spectacula­r firefighte­r, I think the work going forward will be more like mud than fire,” she said.

Grant also cited a need “to bring in long-term leadership.” Olympiadis echoed the same concerns that led her to vote against the contract extension last year. In a written statement, she said the district’s financial responsibi­lity and student academic outcomes “have been marginaliz­ed.”

Esteves said the board notified Carstarphe­n in July that there was not support for a contract renewal, but he said leaders agreed to wait until now to announce it publicly so as not to disrupt the start of school. The board, at the recommenda­tion of the district’s attorneys, has been working with a public relations company to handle communicat­ions about the decision.

Several parents blasted the board for how it made the decision.

“I would like to know where each member stood on the decision of whether or not to renew her. They ought to take a public stance and tell the public how they voted on the non-vote, and why they did not support the extension of her contract,” said John Hutchins, a North Atlanta High School parent.

A variety of challenges bubbled up during Carstarphe­n’s tenure, during which graduation rates went up and principal turnover decreased. Her recommenda­tion to hand over daily operations of six low-performing schools to charter-school operators outraged the Atlanta Federation of Teachers. The group’s president praised the board’s decision to seek a new superinten­dent.

Carstarphe­n also tangled repeatedly with the City of Atlanta as she tried to get control of deeds to school properties held by the city and sought to limit the use of school property taxes to spur developmen­t projects.

In a written statement Monday, a spokesman for Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said: “The city thanks Dr. Carstarphe­n for her effort and wishes her the best in her future endeavors.”

 ?? PHIL SKINNER ?? Atlanta school board chairman Jason Esteves (left) announced Monday that the employment contract for APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n (right), who was hired in 2014, was not renewed and will expire June 30. The board will seek to hire another superinten­dent during that time.
PHIL SKINNER Atlanta school board chairman Jason Esteves (left) announced Monday that the employment contract for APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n (right), who was hired in 2014, was not renewed and will expire June 30. The board will seek to hire another superinten­dent during that time.
 ??  ?? Parent Briggitte Peck questions the Atlanta school board about its announceme­nt that it would not extend Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract during the special meeting on Monday.
Parent Briggitte Peck questions the Atlanta school board about its announceme­nt that it would not extend Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract during the special meeting on Monday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY PHIL SKINNER ?? John Hutchins speaks in support of renewing superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract during Monday’s Atlanta school board special meeting.
PHOTOS BY PHIL SKINNER John Hutchins speaks in support of renewing superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contract during Monday’s Atlanta school board special meeting.

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